Foreign Policy In Focus | Migrants: Globalization's Junk Mail?
Laura Carlsen | February 23, 2007 The titles that Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) attaches to its operations reveal a great deal about the logic behind current U.S. immigration policy. Among the most suggestively titled is the ongoing Operation "Return to Sender," one of the largest such operations in U.S. history. The program, supposedly designed to target "fugitive aliens," has resulted in the indiscriminate round up of over 13,000 undocumented migrants in cities throughout the United States. The cynical name given to this even more cynical operation implies a sender, a receiver -- and an object. The object, or rather objects, are migrant workers and their families. Operation Return to Sender is an instrumentalist policy that ignores the humanity of migrant workers. It refuses to recognize that migrants have hopes and dreams, that they have a legitimate need to eat and think and act. It denies family ties and affective relationships. It also ignores the central role that undocumented workers play in the U.S. economy and the factors that brought them to the country in the first place. In short, Operation Return to Sender acts on the premise that the millions of undocumented workers in the United States today are little more than globalization's junk mail.
Who's the Sender?
A large proportion of the detentions in Operation Return to Sender have
been Mexicans, which is logical given that most undocumented migrants
are Mexican. According to immigration expert Raúl Delgado Wise of the
University of Zacatecas, Mexico is now the world champion in exporting
its own people, with 11 million Mexicans currently residing in the
United States. The migratory drain on Mexico's population shows up in
demographic statistics, where 800 townships now register negative
growth.
The reason for this massive out-migration is clear. Mexico is not
producing enough decent jobs for its people -- and the United States is
hiring. Between 2000 and 2005, Mexico lost 900,000 rural jobs and
700,000 in industry. President Felipe Calderon got off to a bad start
in his attempt to reverse this trend. Government statistics for the
first two months of his administration showed a loss of 178,370 jobs in
the formal sector. The future doesn't look any rosier. A recent Bank of
Mexico business survey projected 615,000 new jobs this year,
representing a drop of 300,000 compared to last year and far short of
the estimated one-million-plus jobs needed to absorb the number of
Mexicans who enter the labor market every year.
Growing unemployment and massive labor outflow are the results of the
lopsided way Mexico has integrated into the global economy. Raúl
Delgado Wise puts it bluntly: "The strategy that Mexico followed
through the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and
indiscriminate trade liberalization detonated an explosive growth in
migration."
The National Campesino Front estimates that two million farmers have
been displaced since NAFTA, in many cases related to the increase in
U.S. imports. In 1994, the first year of the agreement, the United
States exported $4.59 billion of agricultural products to Mexico,
according to the Department of Agriculture. By 2006 the figure had
risen to $9.85 billion -- an increase of 114%. U.S. exports of corn,
Mexico's staple crop and largest source of rural employment, alone
doubled to over $2.5 billion in 2006.
This combination of unemployment in Mexico, the huge gap between
salaries in the United States and Mexico, and U.S. demand for cheap
labor to compete on global markets has created the current situation.
In other words, it's the international labor market that writes the
addresses and stamps the envelopes.
The Mexican government didn't explicitly decide to send off these human
missives to the United States. Despite the central place in the economy
that remittances have gained over the years, no national policy aimed
to export able-bodied citizens abroad. In fact, NAFTA was supposed to
solve immigration problems and decrease the pressure to seek jobs in
the United States.
The Mexican economy has, however, benefited from the predicament.
Guillermo Ortiz, head of the central Bank of Mexico reported recently
that 2006 remittances rose to an all-time high of $23.54 billion -- 20%
over the previous year.
As the second source of foreign income after oil revenues, remittances
have been a main factor in reducing extreme poverty in the countryside.
While the World Bank, among others, cites NAFTA and the Mexican
government's poverty assistance programs for achieving that end, a 2005
report from the Bank of Mexico gives credit where credit's due--poor
families receive more assistance from remittances than from all
government programs combined.
This contradiction has led critics to blame the Mexican government for
fomenting out-migration because of its economic dependency on foreign
income from migrants. Few Mexican politicians explicitly tout the role
of remittances in countering severe imbalances in the national economy.
Nevertheless, this reliance on remittances substitutes for any national
development policies specifically aimed at generating employment and
stimulating rural production.
Who Receives?
According to recent studies, most migrants to the United States already
have a job offer before they get there, or at least strong connections
to sources of employment. The average time between arrival and
employment is very low, usually not more than a few weeks.
The demand for undocumented labor in the U.S. economy is structural.
It's not just a few companies seeking to cut corners. These are not
just jobs that "U.S. workers won't take." Migrants work in nearly all
low-paying occupations and have become essential to the U.S. economy in
the age of global competition.
The meatpacking industry provides a good example. Eric Schlosser's
excellent exposé of the U.S. meat industry as it went global shows a
fast slide in working conditions over the past decades as a result of
de-unionization, erosion of wages and benefits, and increasing safety
and health hazards. Part and parcel of that slide has been the
replacement of unionized U.S. workers with migrants.
The "blame the victim" logic accuses undocumented workers of crossing
the border and stealing these jobs. But the order of events is
demonstrably the opposite. The industry developed cost-cutting
strategies to break up unions and seek out the cheapest, most
vulnerable labor force possible. This created the demand for
undocumented workers.
The example becomes relevant since the ICE just carried out one of its
more spectacular (and controversial) raids on Swift meat-packing plants
in six states, resulting in the arrest of 1,282 workers. Swift claims
the action temporarily shut down 100% of its beef production and 77% of
its pork production.
As David Bacon has pointed out, it's no accident that the actions came
against the Swift plants. Five of the six plants have unions. The
company has complained bitterly that it was in negotiations and fully
cooperating with the federal government when the raids took place.
Aside from traditional employment in agriculture, another major source
of the use of migrant labor has been the advent of sub-contracting.
This practice, well in place since the early 1980s, has contributed to
the de-unionization of the workforce. It conveniently releases
employees from direct responsibility for the legal status and treatment
of workers in their employment.
The ICE reports that even the U.S. military employs illegal migrant
labor. Last September the ICE arrested 122 Mexican and Central American
workers hired by a sub-contractor to build military housing for the
Buckley Air Force Base in Colorado. The ICE used the arrests to once
again make the spurious link between immigration and terrorism. The
press release on the operation notes, "ICE works closely with
industries, such as airports, power plants, oil refineries, and
military bases, to secure them from the risk of terrorist attacks posed
by unauthorized workers employed in secure areas of our nation's
critical infrastructure facilities."
In the end, these selective crackdowns on workers will do nothing to
eliminate underground hiring. Any attempt to more systematically
eliminate undocumented workers from the workforce, rather than sending
a clear signal to migrants as proponents claim, would have the even
more disastrous effect of terrorizing entire communities and creating
labor shortages in vital sectors of the economy.
Likewise, the guest worker programs supported by President Bush and the
Mexican government fail to solve the root problem of a dual labor
market. Divided between legal and illegal workers, this market takes
advantage of the vulnerable status of undocumented workers. Under these
systems, migrant workers still do not enjoy full labor and civil rights
and are often subject to blacklisting if they exercise even their more
limited rights--as seen in the experience under the existing temporary
work visa programs now in existence in certain parts of the United
States.
A More Rational Response
The ICE claims that Operation "Return to Sender" seeks to weed out
those who have committed a crime. But its own records show that for the
majority of detainees, the "crime" is working for low wages in U.S.
factories, meat-packing plants, gardens, and homes without the papers
that have been denied them.
In a weeklong series of raids in the Los Angeles area last January, the
ICE detained 750 migrants. According to its own figures, less than 20%
belonged to the target group of individuals with previous deportation
orders. In raids across the country, ICE reports show that most of
those captured have no previous criminal record.
Immigrant rights organizations have noted that the crackdown has led to
serious human rights violations. Families are separated. Hearings are
slow, and often families do not know for long periods of time where
their loved ones are being held. A January 16 report from the Homeland
Security Department's Inspector General of conditions at five detention
centers identified frequent violation of federal standards,
overcrowding, and health and safety violations.
All this has provoked a response from pro-immigrant groups. Following
the official "progress" report on Operation Return to Sender on Jan.
23, pro-immigrant groups denounced the raids, saying that the 13,000
arrests since May 2006 had led to separation of families, cost the
United States an untold fortune in economic losses, and gets us no
closer to reasonable and viable policies.
In the Los Angeles area the January detentions galvanized local groups
and communities into concerted action, with strategy meetings to stop
the raids. A nationwide mobilization for May Day 2007 is also in the
works.
The revived efforts are good news. The movement had entered into a
soul-searching period following the May 2006 mobilizations. The
unprecedented force of the nationwide demonstrations had a centrifugal
effect on mobilization organizers. Faced with an anti-immigrant
backlash, they could not agree on next steps.
Slowly, however, local, regional, and national organizations are trying
to pull together and develop new strategies. Local actions to defend
immigrant rights, protest detentions, and counter racist vigilante
groups are growing throughout the country, alongside Latino voter
registration drives and for a new effort to reform immigration law.
The Security Illusion
In a visit to Mexico on February 16, Secretary of Homeland Security
Michael Chertoff stated firmly that there could be no consideration of
immigration reform until "the border is secured." By so doing, he
merely reiterated the formula that has deepened the crisis on the
border and eroded binational relations.
This persistent refusal to take a more integrated and realistic
approach has led to a policy dead-end that poses risks for communities
on both sides of the border. Creating new immigration policies that
rationally integrate the nation's security, economic, social, and
political realities is a huge challenge. But approaching that challenge
by focusing exclusively on security exacerbates problems in the other
areas and will ultimately fail to resolve the security issues.
The ICE reports it returned 190,000 migrants to sending nations in
2006. The massive expenditures, economic losses, and human tragedy
produced no demonstrative progress on any front.
Migrant workers are central to cross-border economic integration. A
political system that ignores them -- or worse, treats them as junk
mail -- is not only hypocritical but severely out of touch with
reality.
FPIF columnist Laura Carlsen is director of the IRC Americas Program in
Mexico City, where she has worked as a writer and political analyst for
the past two decades. The Americas Program is online at
http://americas.irc-online.org/.
